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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The Maya site of Tortuguero, Tabasco, Mexico its history and inscriptions

Gronemeyer, Sven January 2004 (has links)
Zugl.: Bonn, Univ., Magisterarbeit, 2004
2

Där regnskogen möter havet : en artikelserie om ett Costa Rica format av ekoturism

Hjalmarsson, Cecilia January 2006 (has links)
<p>Costa Rica är inte vad det en gång har varit. Jaguarjägaren har lagt ner vapnet. Idag försörjer han sig på turister som vill bli ett med naturen. Svenska skolbarn samlar in pengar för att skydda regnskogen i Costa Ricas mest besökta naturreservat. Traditioner som att jaga vilda djur och att skövla dyrbar regnskog är inte längre lagliga.</p><p>Vad händer när ett land satsar på en näring som innebär stora förändringar? Ekoturism är vad turisterna efterfrågar och vad costaricanerna erbjuder.</p>
3

Wasted Visits? Ecotourism in Theory vs. Practice, at Tortuguero, Costa Rica

Meletis, Zoë Angela 14 December 2007 (has links)
In this thesis, I contemplate the ecotourism in theory and in practice. I use the case study of a solid waste crisis (2002-2004) in Tortuguero, Costa Rica, a turtle tourism destination, to explore: the consumptive nature of ecotourism, tourist perceptions of the environment, ecotourism aesthetics, local resistance to ecotourism development, local perceptions of ecotourism's environmental impacts, and the future of ecotourism. I used mixed methods including participant observation, semi-structured interviews, and on-site surveys to collect data. I conducted mainly qualitative analysis (thematic coding; adapted grounded theory) influenced by political ecology, environmental justice, resistance studies, tourism studies, and the geography of tourism. My use of environmental justice concepts to frame the solid waste crisis in Tortuguero, and the application of key concepts from Scott's (1981) Weapons of the Weak to local behavior and narratives both represent fairly novel applications in an ecotourism context. I attempted to move beyond a restricted case study by emphasizing characteristics shared between Tortuguero and other sites, in the hopes of contributing towards efforts to inject new theoretical applications into tourism studies. This case study reveals the consumptive side of ecotourism, and the analysis of tourist survey responses highlights the central role of aesthetics in ecotourism. This project challenges simplistic portrayals of ecotourism as 'benevolent and benign' (e.g. by highlighting its consumptive impacts and related injustices), and of ecotourists as more aware and altruistic than mass tourists (e.g. by presenting a heterogeneous group of respondents who none the less, stress aesthetics). It updates existing literature on Tortuguero by presenting data on tourist and local perceptions of Tortuguero, and by suggesting explanations for divergent perceptions of the park's role in ecotourism, for example. The evidence that I present of local resistance and waste-related injustices suggest that despite its high profile reputation, multimillion dollar annual revenues, improved local standards of living, and green turtle conservation successes, critical details and key voices have largely been 'left out of the story of ecotourism in Tortuguero'. I hope that his study contributes to encouraging the culture of 'greater ecotourism realism' that is needed in order to move forward. / Dissertation
4

Där regnskogen möter havet : en artikelserie om ett Costa Rica format av ekoturism

Hjalmarsson, Cecilia January 2006 (has links)
Costa Rica är inte vad det en gång har varit. Jaguarjägaren har lagt ner vapnet. Idag försörjer han sig på turister som vill bli ett med naturen. Svenska skolbarn samlar in pengar för att skydda regnskogen i Costa Ricas mest besökta naturreservat. Traditioner som att jaga vilda djur och att skövla dyrbar regnskog är inte längre lagliga. Vad händer när ett land satsar på en näring som innebär stora förändringar? Ekoturism är vad turisterna efterfrågar och vad costaricanerna erbjuder.

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